12

my jQuery skills are pretty good normally but this is driving me mad!

It's a fairly simple accordian I've coded up from scratch. Using jQuery 1.3.2 so there shouldn't be any jumping bugs but basically if you take a look at the example:

http://www.mizudesign.com/jquery/accordian/basic.html

I'm displaying the height for the target div on the right - if it contains text it thinks it's shorter than it is and jumping. If it's an image there's no problem.

I can't figure out where I'm going wrong - it's obviously in the CSS somewhere but I've tried all the usual suspects like display:block

Any ideas would be gratefully received!

Yours, Chris

PS Please forgive the nature of the source code, I've ripped it out the whole project I'm working on so it does include some divs that don't really need to be there.

10 Answers 10

18

I must admit I've found my own dynamic solution now.

http://www.mizudesign.com/jquery/accordian/basic.html should be fixed.

It's very simple really - just adds the height using .css before hiding the div. Works a treat :)

$("#PlayerButtonsContent div").each (function() {
$(this).css("height", $(this).height());
});

$("#PlayerButtonsContent div").hide();
1
  • Amazing how the guys in JQuery let this one pass... thanks! Really solves any problema. For ages I was looking for a straight knit solution. Oct 1, 2016 at 23:38
16

You need a width or height on the content for it to animate smoothly.

6
  • Thanks I had read the post but assumed (as I'd read a bug elsewhere) that it applied to a previous version of jQuery. Shame.
    – Mizu
    Jul 7, 2009 at 13:51
  • Must admit I think I've found a better solution since playing around with it - as documented below! :)
    – Mizu
    Jul 7, 2009 at 15:59
  • it still basiclly adds the height to the element!
    – redsquare
    Jul 7, 2009 at 16:23
  • 1
    Except it stores the height in the DOM for reference at any point in time. I started to look at using jQuery .data to store the info but this seemed far more efficient :)
    – Mizu
    Jul 7, 2009 at 16:32
  • That link timed out for me, making answer of limited use. "Links to external resources are encouraged, but please add context around the link so your fellow users will have some idea what it is and why it’s there. Always quote the most relevant part of an important link, in case the target site is unreachable or goes permanently offline." Jul 16, 2015 at 11:05
3

I think the problem is, that when padding or margin is added then it jumps, this was the case by me. you have to animate the margin in the callback

Also "keep in mind" that tables behave buggy with slideDown slideUp and rather use fadeIn fadeOut

1
  • This was by far the easiest solution, whether or not tables are involved. I tried setting css height and other tricks found here, but fadeIn/fadeOut worked brilliantly.
    – eon
    Oct 2, 2014 at 14:56
1

Get the height once the div has finished its animation from the callback. It's possible that you're getting the height while the div is being animated, and you're getting a transitional value.

If your animation is jumpy, try using the callbacks. Don't open a div and hide a div at the same time. Instead, hide your first div, and within the callback show your next div.

$(".someDiv").slideUp("normal", function(){
  /* This animation won't start until the first
     has finished */
  $(".someOtherDiv").slideDown();
});

Updated (From the comments):

redsquare: http://jqueryfordesigners.com/slidedown-animation-jump-revisited/

13
  • Thanks for the answer but I'm not trying to get the height really - that's just debug information. I just want it to animate nicely without jumping!
    – Mizu
    Jul 7, 2009 at 13:10
  • Can you not see the effect on the demo link? When you hit the first two tabs the content jumps at the bottom instead of sliding all the way down. It's not animating smoothly like it does with the third tab. According to the panel on the right of the page it's not pulling out the correct height to animate too. It seems to only work it out once it's animated it once.
    – Mizu
    Jul 7, 2009 at 13:15
  • Try chaining your animations together through their callbacks.
    – Sampson
    Jul 7, 2009 at 13:15
  • Mizu, you're incorrect about the height. You're grabbing the height before the div is even visible completely. This will give you an incomplete height - it would be like me measuring your height when you bend down to tie your shoe.
    – Sampson
    Jul 7, 2009 at 13:16
  • 1
    I must admit I've found my own dynamic solution now. mizudesign.com/jquery/accordian/basic.html should be fixed. It's very simple really - just adds the height using .css before hiding the div. Works a treat :)
    – Mizu
    Jul 7, 2009 at 15:05
1

I also had an annoying slideUp() jump issue that occurred on Safari, but not chrome or IE. It turned out that the div tag I was hiding/showing was right below another div tag that contained float:left divs. During sliding up, the floating divs would be momentarily re-rendered causing the jump.

The fix was simply adding clear:both to the style of the hiding/showing div.

1

My problem is that since I have a responsive design I don't know what the width or height of my element is going to be. After reading this blog post http://www.bennadel.com/blog/2263-Use-jQuery-s-SlideDown-With-Fixed-Width-Elements-To-Prevent-Jumping.htm I realized that jQuery was changing the position of my element to fixed and messing with the layout of the element. I added the following to my CSS for the element and didn't notice any bad side effects in IE7+, firefox, chrome and safari.

display: none;  
overflow: hidden;
position: relative !important;   
1

Replacing margin-top and margin-bottom values with padding-top and padding-bottom values did the trick for me. Don't forget to set the margin value to 0 after this.

0

This worked for me:

$(this).pathtoslidingelementhere.width($(this).parent().width());
0

The issue is due to IE (quirks mode) trying to render "height:0px".

The fix: Animate height to 1 (not 0), then hide and reset height:

// slideUp for all browsers
$("div").animate({ height:1 },{ complete:function(){
        // hide last pixel and reset height
        $(this).hide().css({ height:"" });
    } 
});
0

For me, the problem was the margin (or padding) on the div to show/hide with slide, but I needed to give margin (or padding) to that div. I solved with this trick:

  .slide-div:before{
    content: " ";
    display: block;
    margin-top: 15px;
  }

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